What's Going On Around The World Today?

What's Going On Around The World Today?

Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King Jr., and Susan B. Anthony are among the people who’ll be featured on new U.S. currency. What should social media companies do when a crime is being live-streamed on their platform? And Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-reigning British monarch, turns 90 today.

Harriet Tubman, who helped lead hundreds of slaves to freedom, will be featured on the front of the new $20 bill.

Former U.S. President Andrew Jackson, a controversial figure due to his harsh treatment of Native Americans, will move to the back of the note, BuzzFeed News reports.

The new notes are expected to be unveiled by 2020, the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which gave women the right to vote.

And a little extra

The $10 bill: Founding Father and the country’s first treasury secretary Alexander Hamilton will stay on the front of the note. The back will feature leaders of the movement to give women the right to vote, such as Susan B. Anthony and Lucretia Mott.

The $5 bill: The note will be redesigned to include Martin Luther King Jr., Marian Anderson, and Eleanor Roosevelt. The front will continue to feature President Abraham Lincoln.

The current $10 bill, along with an unofficial mockup, designed by the group Women on 20s, of what the $20 could look like.

She became Britain’s longest-reigning monarch in September 2015, after beating Queen Victoria’s record of 63 years and 216 days on the throne.

In honor of her birthday, the Queen posed for some new pictures and a new set of commemorative stamps was released. Prince Charles has recorded a special radio broadcast for the day and Prime Minister David Cameron will lead tributes to the Queen in Parliament, BBC News writes. And tomorrow, the Queen will have lunch with U.S. President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. Quite the week.

BBC

Queen Elizabeth II at her coronation in 1953. Here’s a look at her life in pictures. And if you’re wondering: What percentage The Queen are you?

Are you into the 2016 U.S. elections and do you want to know~even more~about how Bernie Sanders’ campaign and donors have changed the way we think about money and politics? We got you with our new podcastNo One Knows Anything, hosted by politics reporterEvan McMorris Santoro.You can download the first episode and subscribe to the podcasthere.

WE’RE KEEPING AN EYE ON

When rape is broadcast live on the internet.

The freedom to live-stream just about anything, anywhere in the world, has made live video hugely popular. But what should social media companies do when a crime is being live-streamed on their platform? BuzzFeed News uncovered one apparent incident of a rape aired in real time and watched by thousands of people, and asked what it means for the companies that host this content.

Sexual assault, domestic abuse, and attempted murder are among the crimes recently captured on live video services. Twitter and Facebook, two of the biggest companies pushing live video, have guidelines and a flagging system in place that aim to filter out illegal content, BuzzFeed News’ Rossalyn Warren writes.

For both companies, however, moderating is a time-consuming and challenging process. Although they hope users will embrace live video, experts say a different or more advanced way of monitoring content is needed if crime is live streamed, so authorities can stop it.

Sian Butcher / BuzzFeed

A Periscope live video shared on Twitter on March 30 showed three young men and one young woman engaging in sexual activity in a well-lit bedroom in London.

A little extra tech

People are accusing Snapchat of promoting a form of blackface with a Bob Marley-themed filter, which digitally imposes Marley’s face and dreadlocks over a user’s face.

Game over: Microsoft is killing the Xbox 360. The company will continue to support Xbox 360 hardware and Xbox Live services for it. Games will remain available for purchase while supplies last.

A bride wore pajamas to her wedding and it was perfect.

You are cordially invited to a formal pajama wedding. The groom will wear bedtime black tie: a tuxedo shirt and black satin bow tie under blue polka-dot pajamas. The bride will wear a blush bedcoat and a simple birdcage veil.

Marisa Carroll hadn’t anticipated ever getting married, let alone in the white-paneled living room of her in-laws’ house in Maryland. But when she learned that her mother-in-law was dying, there was only one way for Carroll and her then-fiancé to make their wedding feel like a celebration: to bring the wedding to her mother-in-law, wearing pajamas for maximum comfort.

“This wasn’t going to be a Pinterest ‘backyard wedding,’” Carroll writes. The couple ordered a cake from the gay-owned bakery down the street and had their siblings take pictures. “Quickly, this started to feel like our wedding, rather than a bag of lemons we were hopelessly juicing.”

Quick things to know:

Three officials were charged yesterday in connection with the water contamination crisis in Flint, Michigan — the first criminal charges to be filed. (BuzzFeed News)

The Canadian government said it will introduce a bill to legalize marijuana next year. (BuzzFeed News)

BuzzFeed News investigates: A firm co-owned by a Conservative election guru in the UK — who ran British Prime Minister David Cameron’s campaign — was hired for £45,000 by a “key member” of a Russian organized crime gang. (BuzzFeed News) El Paso, Texas has been sued over jailing people for unpaid traffic tickets. Legal advocates say the city has failed to reform unconstitutional practices that BuzzFeed News exposed last fall. (BuzzFeed News)

McDonald’s is experimenting with the Big Mac by offering both a super-sized Grand Mac (890 calories) and a miniaturized Mac Jr. (480 calories). (BuzzFeed News) And have you seen Diet Coke’s makeover? (BuzzFeed News)

Via Giphy

Happy Thursday

Italian designer Gianluca Gimini has turned people’s horrible drawings of bicycles into lifelike renders. For years, Gimini asked friends, family, and complete strangers to draw a bicycle from memory. In 2016, he turned these drawings into an almost-reality, BuzzFeed News’ Rachael Krishna writes. But before you get excited about a personalized design — most of these are impossible to ride.